News

Reddit announced today that it has started verifying UK users' ages before letting them "view certain mature content" in ...
Last summer's riots show how some content can be harmful but not illegal The Online Safety Act fails to tackle online ...
Ian Russell, whose daughter Molly tragically took her own life in 2017 after accessing horrendous material online, told the ...
After years of campaigning and political debate, tech platforms will - within weeks - be legally obliged to stop kids seeing ...
The government is considering further action to keep children safe online and will not "sit back and wait" on the issue, a ...
Ofcom’s chief executive Dame Melanie Dawes defended reforms coming into effect on July 25. Technology companies are not being ...
Communications Minister Datuk Fahmi Fadzil has revealed that the government may soon require digital platforms to label all ...
A report from the Commons Science, Innovation and Technology Committee outlines how the Online Safety Act fails to deal with the algorithmic amplification of ‘legal but harmful’ misinformation.
A man who was the first to be charged with encouraging serious self-harm online under Section 184 of the Online Safety Act 2023 has been sentenced to a nine years and four month prison term - ...